Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls

Free Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls by Steve Hockensmith

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Authors: Steve Hockensmith
volunteered to attend to Emily Ward “in the necessary way,” and no one seemed anxious to stay and see just what that meant.
    After cutting the dead girl free from her drowning stone, the men carried her body a short distance into the woods. As they settled itdown in a small, rocky clearing, Elizabeth steeled herself, walked back to the water, and collected Emily’s head. She grasped it by the hair as she brought it to her father, holding it far out before her, like Diogenes with his lantern.
    Jane turned her back as she went by.
    “So . . .,” Elizabeth said once head and body were reunited. She had to lick her lips and swallow hard before she could go on. “What happens next?”
    The stranger narrowed his dark eyes, squinting at her as if she were a pane of frosted glass he was trying to peer through.
    Her father spoke up before the other man could.
    “If you will permit it, sir, I would like to spare my daughter this one, last thing.”
    It disturbed Elizabeth to hear her father deferring to such a far younger man, yet it bothered her even more that she might be dismissed—as indeed she was.
    “You have spared your daughters too much already, Oscar Bennet,” the stranger said. “A final indulgence would be but a pebble atop Mount Fuji.” He looked at Elizabeth and gave a brusque wave toward the lake. “Go. Wait.”
    Elizabeth held his gaze a moment, not moving, before choosing to do as he said.
    “What will become of Emily’s body?” Jane asked as her sister rejoined her by the water.
    “I don’t know. Something Papa did not want me to see.”
    Together, they watched their father and the stranger. But the men were shrouded in the shadows of the forest, and all they could discern was a flurry of movement, a ray of stray sunlight flashing off a raised blade, and then, a moment later, flames and smoke that rose high like a pyre before dying out with surprising speed.
    When Mr. Bennet came to collect the girls, he looked as grim as Elizabeth had ever seen him.
    “Come,” he said. “We return to Longbourn.”
    “All of us?” Elizabeth asked.
    The stranger was striding in the opposite direction, toward a large, black horse—practically a Clydesdale, it was so big. It stamped a huge hoof with impatience as it waited for its master, its reins wrapped around a low-hanging branch.
    “Yes,” Mr. Bennet said. “All of us.”
    During the ride back, Elizabeth had her best chance yet to make a thorough study of the mysterious young man from “the Order” (whatever that was). She and Jane were riding behind him and their father, yet she didn’t need to look the stranger in the face to read his character. The stiffness of his bearing, the long straight line of his broad shoulders, the stern snap of his tone when speaking to Mr. Bennet, even the peculiar way he wore his long, thick, shiny-black hair, pulled up in a queue that sprouted from just below his crown—all spoke of discipline and strength of will. And haughtiness and pride, as well.
    Elizabeth knew she should resent his arrogance, especially his condescension to her father, yet she found she couldn’t. It was because he represented hope, she told herself. If, as Mr. Bennet insisted, she and her sisters needed to be molded into warriors, here might be the man to do it. After all, one doesn’t forge a sword on a blancmange. It takes an anvil of iron. And this young man certainly seemed hard and cold enough to pass for one.
    Upon reaching Longbourn, they found the rest of the girls engaged in proper-ish ladylike pursuits under the unenthused tutelage of Mrs. Hill the housekeeper, who’d been temporarily drafted into service as a reluctant replacement for Miss Chiselwood. Mary was hunched over a book (her history of The Troubles, Elizabeth was pleased to see); Kitty was working on her poise by toying with nunchucks while the etiquette guide she was supposed to be reading sat balanced atop her head. Lydia, meanwhile, was honing her embroidery skills

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